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A Video-Based Procedure-Specific Competency Assessment Tool for Minimally Invasive Esophagectomy.

Authors :
Ketel MHM
Klarenbeek BR
Eddahchouri Y
Cheong E
Cuesta MA
van Daele E
Ferri LE
Gisbertz SS
Gutschow CA
Hubka M
Hölscher AH
Law S
Luyer MDP
Merritt RE
Morse CR
Mueller CL
Nieuwenhuijzen GAP
Nilsson M
Pattyn P
Shen Y
van den Wildenberg FJH
Abma IL
Rosman C
van Workum F
Source :
JAMA surgery [JAMA Surg] 2024 Mar 01; Vol. 159 (3), pp. 297-305.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Importance: Minimally invasive esophagectomy (MIE) is a complex procedure with substantial learning curves. In other complex minimally invasive procedures, suboptimal surgical performance has convincingly been associated with less favorable patient outcomes as assessed by peer review of the surgical procedure.<br />Objective: To develop and validate a procedure-specific competency assessment tool (CAT) for MIE.<br />Design, Setting, and Participants: In this international quality improvement study, a procedure-specific MIE-CAT was developed and validated. The MIE-CAT contains 8 procedural phases, and 4 quality components per phase are scored with a Likert scale ranging from 1 to 4. For evaluation of the MIE-CAT, intraoperative MIE videos performed by a single surgical team in the Esophageal Center East Netherlands were peer reviewed by 18 independent international MIE experts (with more than 120 MIEs performed). Each video was assessed by 2 or 3 blinded experts to evaluate feasibility, content validity, reliability, and construct validity. MIE-CAT version 2 was composed with refined content aimed at improving interrater reliability. A total of 32 full-length MIE videos from patients who underwent MIE between 2011 and 2020 were analyzed. Data were analyzed from January 2021 to January 2023.<br />Exposure: Performance assessment of transthoracic MIE with an intrathoracic anastomosis.<br />Main Outcomes and Measures: Feasibility, content validity, interrater and intrarater reliability, and construct validity, including correlations with both experience of the surgical team and clinical parameters, of the developed MIE-CAT.<br />Results: Experts found the MIE-CAT easy to understand and easy to use to grade surgical performance. The MIE-CAT demonstrated good intrarater reliability (range of intraclass correlation coefficients [ICCs], 0.807 [95% CI, 0.656 to 0.892] for quality component score to 0.898 [95% CI, 0.846 to 0.932] for phase score). Interrater reliability was moderate (range of ICCs, 0.536 [95% CI, -0.220 to 0.994] for total MIE-CAT score to 0.705 [95% CI, 0.473 to 0.846] for quality component score), and most discrepancies originated in the lymphadenectomy phases. Hypothesis testing for construct validity showed more than 75% of hypotheses correct: MIE-CAT performance scores correlated with experience of the surgical team (r = 0.288 to 0.622), blood loss (r = -0.034 to -0.545), operative time (r = -0.309 to -0.611), intraoperative complications (r = -0.052 to -0.319), and severe postoperative complications (r = -0.207 to -0.395). MIE-CAT version 2 increased usability. Interrater reliability improved but remained moderate (range of ICCs, 0.666 to 0.743), and most discrepancies between raters remained in the lymphadenectomy phases.<br />Conclusions and Relevance: The MIE-CAT was developed and its feasibility, content validity, reliability, and construct validity were demonstrated. By providing insight into surgical performance of MIE, the MIE-CAT might be used for clinical, training, and research purposes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2168-6262
Volume :
159
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JAMA surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38150247
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1001/jamasurg.2023.6522